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2d 646
those unfound mortgagors to whom HUD has owed refund money for one year
or more. Aronson then traces these people himself, informs them of the refund
they are entitled to, and charges them 35 percent of the refund as payment for
his services.
2
We previously considered the legal question of whether, and when, the law
permitted Aronson to obtain this information. Aronson v. U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 822 F.2d 182 (1st Cir.1987) (Aronson I ).
We held that "Exemption 6" of the Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. Sec.
552(b)(6) (1982), which allows the agency to withhold information where
release would constitute "a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy,"
permitted HUD to withhold the refund information for one year. During that
year, we found that the interest in keeping personal financial information
private outweighs any interest in disclosure. HUD itself must have an
undisturbed opportunity to return the complete amount of the refund to the
mortgagor, before a private entrepreneur is given the chance to provide the
mortgagor with only two-thirds of his share. The second year, however, posed a
more difficult problem. We noted that HUD had tried for a year and failed to
locate the mortgagors. We emphasized that the record as to HUD's second year
efforts was "murky," "vague," and without indication that HUD was "actively
pursuing" the missing mortgagors. Id. at 187. We concluded that, in light of
those two circumstances, the need to "assur[e] the disbursement of these funds"
strongly favored public disclosure. And, we held that HUD could therefore
keep the names confidential only for one year, not two. Subsequently HUD
turned over to Aronson all names of the people owed money for more than a
year, i.e., those up to September 30, 1986, one year prior to October 1987,
when the judgment in the case became final.
The case before us involves another Aronson request, a request he made in May
1988, for all names of people owed refunds up to May 1987. The government,
despite Aronson I, refused to disclose the second year, May 1986-May 1987
names. Aronson brought this law suit; and the government defended on the
grounds that it had subsequently improved its second year search procedure. Its
affidavits indicate, with reasonable specificity, that HUD's new second year
search procedures include matching the names of the unfound mortgagors with
1) the Internal Revenue Service's computer data base of taxpayer address
information, 2) the address-forwarding files of the U.S. Postal Service, and 3)
names in Transunion Credit Corporation's credit reference computer. HUD then
sends new notices to mortgagors it has located.
The district court in this case concluded, despite these new procedures, that it
should grant Aronson a preliminary injunction requiring HUD to give Aronson
all "second year" names. Although the court wrote that "[t]here is no showing
that [HUD's] new [second year] methods are any more efficacious than the
old," it seemed to base its decision on its view that "the finding and ruling by
the court of appeals [in Aronson I ] is preclusive of relitigation in a collateral
proceeding." The court, referring to the traditional requirements for granting a
preliminary injunction, Planned Parenthood League of Mass. v. Bellotti, 641
F.2d 1006, 1009 (1st Cir.1981), said that "[t]he plaintiff is likely to succeed on
the merits because he has already won a judgment." It added that "[t]he
balancing of harm and the weighing of the public interest has already been done
by the court of appeals [in Aronson I ] in favor of the plaintiff."
5
While we fully understand how the district court could have reached its
conclusions, we nonetheless find, after re-examining both our prior opinion and
the affidavits, that the government has raised a significant issue in respect to
changed circumstances. Our opinion in Aronson I emphasized the closeness of
the question of privacy versus disclosure in the second year and the importance
of HUD's failure to demonstrate the adequacy of its second year search
procedures. Aronson I suggested that if those procedures were adequate, the
interest in channelling refunds to mortgagors (at a price of a one-third
commission) would no longer outweigh the interest in keeping personal
information confidential. And, the affidavits here suggest that the new
procedures may be so different from those described in Aronson I as to at least
warrant a reconsideration of the question. Cf. Farnum v. U.S. Dept. of Housing
and Urban Development, 710 F.Supp. 1129 (E.D.Mich. 1988) (finding for
HUD and distinguishing Aronson I on the basis of the agency's improved
second year procedures).